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Thursday, July 18, 2013

`This Idiot Had Been at the Moment Inspired'

We
assumed the grownups were smarter than us, even when they behaved stupidly. Oafishness
masked their true selves, which were brilliantly incisive and witty. When we
got older, we would understand the subterfuge and adopt it ourselves, becoming
comparably incisive and witty. But then we slowly woke to our delusion. The
grownups were at least as dumb as we were. The mystery eluded them, too. Each
of us, we learned with bitterness, remains an indelible amalgam of accomplishment
and near-idiocy, and our insights into the true nature of others are pathetically
incomplete and self-serving. We’re strangers to ourselves and others.

In
1739, the satirical painter and printmaker William Hogarth was visiting the
home of Samuel Richardson, author of Clarissa.
Hogarth observed a stranger standing at the window, “shaking his head, and
rolling himself about in a strange ridiculous manner. He concluded that he was
an idiot, whom his relations had put under the care of Mr. Richardson, as a
very good man.”

The
stranger was Samuel Johnson and the author of the anecdote was his future
biographer, James Boswell. Johnson soon joined the conversation with Hogarth
and Richardson, condemning George II as “unrelenting and barbarous.” Boswell adds,
“In short, [Johnson] displayed such a power of eloquence, that Hogarth looked
at him with astonishment, and actually imagined that this idiot had been at the
moment inspired.” The painter and lexicographer-poet became friends, and after Hogarth’s
death in 1764, Johnson wrote four lines about him, quoted in a footnote by
Boswell:

“The
hand of him here torpid lies,

That drew the essential form of grace;

Here
clos’d in death the attentive eyes,

That saw the manners in the face.”

Boswell,
the greatest of biographers, remains misunderstood, dismissed as a pox-ridden
drunk, an idiot savant of literature. Privately, Boswell questioned his own
gifts and suspected he was the fraud his detractors have dismissed. In his
diary on Dec. 22, 1775 (Boswell: The
OminousYears 1774-1776), he
writes, in a passage many of us could claim as our own:

“There
is an imperfection, a superficialness, in all my notions. I understand nothing
clearly, nothing to the bottom. I pick up fragments, but never have in my
memory a mass of any size. I wonder really if it be possible for me to acquire any
one part of knowledge fully. I am a lawyer. I have no system of law. I write
verse. I know nothing of the art of poetry. In short I could go through
everything in the same way.”